1. Geoff Riley FRSA - Teaching and Learning Technologies
Personal Learning Networks in Economics Teaching
“Chance favours the connected mind”
There is growing interest within the teaching community in how personal learning networks (PLNs) can be
nurtured as part of continuing professional development (CPD). Whilst most schools and colleges have
commitment to CPD and a sizeable budget to go with it, the best CPD does not carry a heavy financial cost.
Indeed, many of the best resources and events are free!
What is a personal learning network?
A PLN might be defined as "the entire collection of people with whom you connect, engage and exchange
information both offline and online." This will continuously change and evolve – it must do to avoid
information overload for very busy people!
“Personal learning networks are a tool to help teachers think outside of the box and to gain new ideas about
teaching and learning beyond the confines of their school.” (AJ.McCarthy Blog)
Many networks become a varied and vibrant blend of face-to-face connection allied to powerful sharing
and networking opportunities through the open web. I believe strongly that the increasingly sophisticated
usage of Facebook, Twitter and other social media tools within education serves to increase demand for
face-to-face conversations especially for people who have met initially within online communities.
Building a personalised learning network
The components of a PLN might start with a professional goal or a desire to develop a personal interest
(perhaps finding your element in the spirit of the work of Ken Robinson!).
At the heart of a PLN is creating an infrastructure from which network nodes can appear. Some become part
of your daily routine; others are brought into play only once or twice a year - all have the potential for
enrichment of your work as a teacher and in other areas of school life.
2. Geoff Riley FRSA - Teaching and Learning Technologies
Facebook users share more than 30 billion pieces of content—Web links, news stories, blog posts, photos
each month. Twitter users generate more than 155 million tweets per day (up from 55 million one year ago).
54 percent of adults who own mobile phones access Twitter with their mobile device
School
Work
Tutor2u
Twitter
Contacts
RES Team Facebook
PLN
You Tube Teacher
& ITunes Blogs
Prof News
Bodies Media
3. Geoff Riley FRSA - Teaching and Learning Technologies
Enrichment lectures at universities and other organisations
At Eton we are lucky to be within sufficiently close reach of the capital to attend many lectures and public
events held by the LSE, the RSA, the RGS, and the Royal Society et al. All of them provide pod-casts and/or
videos of the events - often streamed live for those who are unable to get to the capital on the day itself. The
Independent on a Saturday is excellent for flagging up talks and other events for the week ahead.
RSA Talks
LSE Public Lectures
Royal Society
Gresham College
Twitter
Many teachers and students are now making use of Twitter as a learning resource. I
constantly remind myself of Steven Johnson's phrase from "Where Good Ideas come
From" - that "chance favours the connected mind." Twitter encourages this approach!
Follow tweets from fellow teachers, professors, journalists, authors,
organisations, friends
Twitter is great for finding out first events, lectures and films that you might want to see
Create your own lists of key topics and generate lists / categories of contacts
Use Twitter as a forum for floating ideas and engaging in collaborative work e.g. through the
weekly #edchat hour on a Thursday evening and #teacherontwitter
Every day there is something to surprise and inform, to question and to challenge.
i. Al Jazeera English (Business News) @ajenglish
ii. David Smith (Sunday Times) @dsmitheconomics
iii. Robert Went @went1955 Economist at Dutch Scientific Council
iv. Tim Harford @timharford (author)
v. Dan Ariely @danariely (author)
vi. Faisal Islam (Channel 4) @faisalislam
vii. BBC Newsnight: @BBCNewsnight
viii. Paul Krugman (New York Times) @NYTimeskrugman
ix. Guardian Business Desk @businessdesk
x. Gapminder (Hans Rosling) @hansrosling
xi. Professor Danny Quah (LSE) @dannyquah
xii. Michael Porter (Business Strategy) @michaeleporter
xiii. Kevin Hinde @kevinhinde Director of Distance
Learning at Durham Business School
xiv. Richard Otley (Colfe’s School): @COLFESeconomics
xv. Graham Carter @ GrahamCarterGC (see also:
http://cifco.posterous.com/)
xvi. Tom Barrett (@tombarrett) – superb e-learning
evangelist and enthusiast – makes fantastic use of
collaborative Google docs.
4. Geoff Riley FRSA - Teaching and Learning Technologies
Facebook and Teacher Blogs
It is interesting to see the use of Facebook by a growing number of economics teachers and
departments. Many teachers are experimenting with how it can be used to support their
work. A small but dedicated band of teacher’s blog about their subject and encourage
their students to do likewise.
BBC Business News: www.facebook.com/bbcbusiness
Bromsgrove School Business and Economics Department on Facebook
Econ Fix (Mark Johnston) http://econfix.wordpress.com/
EconoMix (New York Times): http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/
Edinburgh Uni Econ Department: www.facebook.com/UOE.Economics
Financial Times (Beyond BRICS): http://blogs.ft.com/beyond-brics/
Financial Times Blogs: www.ft.com/comment/blogs
Institute for New Economic Thinking www.facebook.com/INETeconomics
Intelligence Squared: www.facebook.com/intelligence2
John Sloman’s Economics News Blog: http://pearsonblog.campaignserver.co.uk/
Management Today: www.facebook.com/managementtodaymag
Radio 4 Analysis www.facebook.com/BBCRadio4Analysis?ref=ts
Tutor2u on Facebook: www.facebook.com/Tutor2u
Wellington College: Forum is here Wellington College Economics
Radio and TV
Good old-fashioned radio as a component of a PLN! A little time on a Sunday evening listening to Radio 4
whilst marking is always a productive time ahead of a new working week. And the BBC iPlayer or iTunes
offers an easy way to catch up.
Radio 4 Analysis: www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006r4vz
Radio 4 More or Less: www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006qshd
Reuters UK Business: http://uk.reuters.com/business
Sky Business News: http://news.sky.com/skynews/Business
World Business Report: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/1143010.stm
5. Geoff Riley FRSA - Teaching and Learning Technologies
Student-run societies
These are often the best form of CPD and the quality of the speakers
that have spoken at school has usually been first-rate. They offer great
opportunities for cross-curricular understanding – an example being a
visit to the Geography Society last autumn to hear Charles Clover –
author of The End of the Line (the book became a film).
ITunes and You Tube and Flickr
Great channels are emerging for blending new content into teaching
and for encouraging students to do independent research. These seem
to have particular currency when stretching highly-able students
aiming for top UK and overseas universities.
iTunes U
i. Critical reasoning for beginners (Oxford)
ii. Centre for Entrepreneurial Learning (Cambridge)
iii. Discussions on entrepreneurship (Cambridge)
iv. Game Theory (Yale)
You Tube and You Tube Edu
i. Channel 4 on Demand Documentaries
ii. World Bank
iii. International Monetary Fund
iv. The Economist
Flickr and other image & data repositories (great for sourcing ideas for visual learners)
i. Boston Globe Big Picture: http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/
ii. Economist Daily Chart: www.economist.com/blogs/dailychart
iii. Flickr for teachers e.g. Bad Maths: http://www.flickr.com/groups/badmaths/
iv. Guardian Business Week: www.guardian.co.uk/business/series/weekinpictures
v. Guardian Data: http://www.guardian.co.uk/data
vi. Timetric: http://timetric.com/public-data/
Films and Book Festivals
I try to take time out to visit book and film festivals two or three times
and year and keep up to speed with new works, films and
documentaries that can be used in the classroom. A popular blog
project has been Economics at the Movies and many fellow teachers
have contributed. I follow a number of authors and directors on Twitter.
6. Geoff Riley FRSA - Teaching and Learning Technologies
Subject associations and outside bodies
I really enjoy the team work that goes into judging the annual RES essay competition and my PLN has
grown substantially from this and also working with a team of presenters on the Tutor2u workshop /
enrichment & conference events including our Teach Econ events.
EBEA: I am a member but rarely use their resources – in my opinion the EBEA is behind the
curve and stuck in a time warp. It does have a Facebook page
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=89008691511 but just 3 posts in six months!
Royal Economic Society: Their annual lectures are well attended and I have taken students
in the past. Details and podcasts available here: http://www.res.org.uk/society/lecture.asp
Society of Business Economists: The SBE has some useful information for non members
Visits to other schools and colleges
I try to fit a few visits a year into my schedule and am always happy to host other colleagues. Maintaining
contacts with current academics at universities in the UK and overseas is important to keep up to date with
the ever-changing scene and requirements for UCAS entry. Many universities offer summer residential
placements for colleagues wanting to refresh their skills and knowledge.
Collaboration using web tools
Drop Box: www.dropbox.com - we use this extensively in sharing files between members of
the Tutor2u revision workshop presenting teams.
Google Docs: www.googledocs.com – one of many Google Apps that can be used for
teaching and collaborative work among students
Slideshare - for sharing presentations and the option of allowing others to download
Moodle: http://moodle.org - an open source community responsible for developing the VLE
platform that we use for our own student VLE
Andrew McCarthy (IT Blog) http://ajmccarthynz.wordpress.com/ - brilliant blog from an
economics/IT teacher in New Zealand who is also expert at utilising digital tools in teaching
7. Geoff Riley FRSA - Teaching and Learning Technologies
Feeds from economics research and other sources:
Deloitte Economic Review: www.deloitte.com/view/en_GB/uk/research-and-
intelligence/economic-commentary/index.htm
LSE Centrepiece: http://cep.lse.ac.uk/CentrePiece/
Project Syndicate: www.project-syndicate.org/
PWC Outlook: www.pwc.co.uk/eng/publications/uk_economic_outlook.html
Royal Economic Society: http://www.res.org.uk/society/mediabriefings.asp
The Browser: http://thebrowser.com/sections/business-economics
Vox EU Blog: www.voxeu.org/
Overview
Personal learning networks take many forms and I am sure that I have
missed out some important ingredients! I ought to give greater weight
to the ideas and arguments that come from my own students many of
whom are keen to share what they have read or picked up in the media.
I have left out the many conversations and exchanges of views and
resources that take place day in day out within my own school
department and also using traditional email channels with colleagues
from many other schools.
In my opinion many commercial CPD events are quite frankly shocking - and the exam boards charge full
commercial rates for day-long events in the company of ageing retainers whose ambition is limited to poring
over past papers. This CPD is sterile and expensive and too driven by the minutiae of exams, mark schemes
and jumping through hoops. A personal learning network will have exam work in focus at certain times of
the year but it should be much more than this. I hope that this short paper has given a flavour of some of the
components of my own personal learning network. What do you include in yours?
Geoff Riley FRSA - June 2011